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django-rosetta 0.7.4

Rosetta is a Django application that eases the translation process of your Django projects.

Because it doesn’t export any models, Rosetta doesn’t create any tables in your project’s database. Rosetta can be installed and uninstalled by simply adding and removing a single entry in your project’s INSTALLED_APPS and a single line in your main urls.py file.

ROSETTA_MESSAGES_SOURCE_LANGUAGE_CODE and ROSETTA_MESSAGES_SOURCE_LANGUAGE_NAME: Change these if the source language in your PO files isn’t English. Default to 'en' and 'English' respectively.

ROSETTA_WSGI_AUTO_RELOAD and ROSETTA_UWSGI_AUTO_RELOAD: When running WSGI daemon mode, using mod_wsgi 2.0c5 or later, this setting controls whether the contents of the gettext catalog files should be automatically reloaded by the WSGI processes each time they are modified. For performance reasons, this setting should be disabled in production environments. Default to False.

ROSETTA_EXCLUDED_APPLICATIONS: Exclude applications defined in this list from being translated. Defaults to ().

ROSETTA_REQUIRES_AUTH: Require authentication for all Rosetta views. Defaults to True.

ROSETTA_POFILE_WRAP_WIDTH: Sets the line-length of the edited PO file. Set this to 0 to mimic makemessage’s --no-wrap option. Defaults to 78.

ROSETTA_STORAGE_CLASS: See the note below on Storages. Defaults to rosetta.storage.CacheRosettaStorage

ROSETTA_ACCESS_CONTROL_FUNCTION: An alternative function that determines if a given user can access the translation views. This function receives a user as its argument, and returns a boolean specifying whether the passed user is allowed to use Rosetta or not.

ROSETTA_CACHE_NAME: When using rosetta.storage.CacheRosettaStorage, you can store the rosetta data in a specific cache. This is particularly useful when your default cache is a django.core.cache.backends.dummy.DummyCache (which happens on pre-production environments). If unset, it will default to rosetta if a cache with this name exists, or default if not.

ROSETTA_POFILENAMES: Defines which po filenames are exposed in the web interface. Defaults to ('django.po', 'djangojs.po')

Storages

To prevent re-reading and parsing the PO file catalogs over and over again, Rosetta stores them in a volatile location. This can be either the HTTP session or the Django cache.

Django 1.4 has introduced a signed cookie session backend, which stores the whole content of the session in an encrypted cookie. Unfortunately this doesn’t work with large PO files, as the limit of 4096 chars that can be stored in a cookie are easily exceeded.

In this case the Cache-based backend should be used (by setting ROSETTA_STORAGE_CLASS = 'rosetta.storage.CacheRosettaStorage'). Please make sure that a proper CACHES backend is configured in your Django settings if your Django app is being served in a multi-process environment, or the different server processes, serving subsequent requests, won’t find the storage data left by previous requests.

Alternatively you can switch back to using the Session based storage by setting ROSETTA_STORAGE_CLASS = 'rosetta.storage.SessionRosettaStorage in your settings. This is perfectly safe on Django 1.3. On Django 1.4 or higher make sure you have DON’T use the signed_cookiesSESSION_BACKEND with this Rosetta storage backend or funky things might happen.

TL;DR: if you run Django with gunincorn, mod-wsgi or other multi-process environment, the Django-default CACHESLocMemCache backend won’t suffice: use memcache instead, or you will run into issues.

Security

Because Rosetta requires write access to some of the files in your Django project, access to the application is restricted to the administrator user only (as defined in your project’s Admin interface)

Usage

Generate a batch of files to translate

Translate away!

Start your Django development server and point your browser to the URL prefix you have chosen during the installation process. You will get to the file selection window.

Select a file and translate each untranslated message. Whenever a new batch of messages is processed, Rosetta updates the corresponding django.po file and regenerates the corresponding mo file.

This means your project’s labels will be translated right away, unfortunately you’ll still have to restart the webserver for the changes to take effect. (NEW: if your webserver supports it, you can force auto-reloading of the translated catalog whenever a change was saved. See the note regarding the ROSETTA_WSGI_AUTO_RELOAD variable in conf/settings.py.

If the webserver doesn’t have write access on the catalog files (as shown in the screen shot below) an archive of the catalog files can be downloaded.

Translating Rosetta itself

By default Rosetta hides its own catalog files in the file selection interface (shown above.) If you would like to translate Rosetta to your own language: